movies

About Bananas

Complete presentation of the banana industry from the clearing of the jungle and the planting to the shipment of the fruit to the American markets.

Shotlist

This film takes the place of an earlier one titled "Banana Land." Complete presentation of the banana industry from the clearing of the jungle and the planting to the shipment of the fruit to the American markets.

Silent film with title cards
Educational film about bananas and Central American countries.
Emphasis is given to the food value of the banana. "Complete presentation of the banana industry from the clearing of the jungle and the planting to the shipment of the fruit to the American markets. Scenes laid in Central America." (Wisconsin)

Stock shots: Child eating bowl of bananas and milk (prescribed by a doctor)
Some stop-motion animation of bananas.Children eating bananas
Man climbing palm tree
Guatemala City landmarks; Indian women going to the plaza to fill water urns which they then place on their heads;
oxcarts full of firewood; markets
Virgin jungle being converted into a banana plantation;
Felling of massive trees
Building irrigation canals with heavy machinery and explosives
Planting banana root stock.
Pack animals carrying loads of large banana bunches.
Dock workers loading stalks onto revolving machine.
GREAT WHITE FLEET (United Fruit Company banana cargo ships)
Aerial shot of banana boat.
bananas Central America
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Reviews

Thanks stbalbach! It is a shame the majority of Americans deny the truth you have revealed. And it is all declassified for some time. Anyone can go and read them at National Security Archives http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/ . And the US corporations run government still does the same regime change thing for the sake of the Fortune 500 until this day. Jacapo Arbenz simply wanted to give his workers a wage out of misery to poverty. And back then as today we use the nefarious trojan horse of spreading democracy from which within comes capitalist exploitation at the point of a gun directly or by proxy.

2. I remember 20 years ago you could buy some bananas, leave them to go black on the outside and even after a few weeks from purchase, yet even over ripe and overly sweet the fruit from the black skinned banana was still edible and a sweet treat. For a decade or more I have found that in less than a week from purchase, you peel open a banana that is still mostly yellow skinned but the fruit is grey and foaming, definitely rotting. Is this a genetically modified example of planned, speedy obsolescence? Now i think of it, seems most fruits and vegetables go bad quicker than a couple decades ago

About Bananas (1935) was sponsored by United Fruit, today's Chiquita. At the time, the president of the company was Sam Zemurray, who in 1933 led a hostile takeover of United Fruit. Zemurray, a Russian Jewish immigrant from the working class, addressed the stodgy Boston Brahmin board of directors of United Fruit: “You gentlemen have been fucking up this business long enough. I’m going to straighten it out,” and immediately fired them all. The company was failing and Zemurray restored it to become the dominate banana company in the world. This film was part of Zemurray's PR campaign to get Americans to start eating banana's again, after sales had dropped with the start of the depression in 1929. This propaganda film is from the school of Edward Bernays, the originator of modern public relations (the Nazi's were avid followers of Bernays techniques but for ends more nefarious than eating bananas). Bernays and Zemurray and the CIA would later collaborate in the overthrow of government of Guatemala, in the 1950s, to make the country more suitable for United Fruit (a "Banana Republic"); a similar exercise was attempted with Cuba at the Bay of Pigs, which failed, but the CIA today uses propaganda to destabilize or help overthrow governments all over the world for American business and political interests. It all goes back to bananas and Zemurray and United Fruit and the banana republics of the old days. To learn more about Zemurray and United Fruit I recommend The Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America's Banana King (2012).

This is a typical info-commercial of those times. But it is difficult to understand why it is the most downloaded movie on this archive with over 26 million downloads. There must be some hidden story behind this.
Love those obese mineral imps!

It takes a man with an idea and men with steam shovels, dynamite, concrete, locomotives, ships and 100Âs of workers to make growing bananas into a business. Definitely a pro-banana movie as none of the methods are shown for pest control and no consideration is given to the landmass used.

This 1920s silent film about how great bananas are already has a lot of the standard conventions of industrial films. The first part of it shows in detail how bananas are grown and harvested in various Caribbean countries. Then it switches into housewife mode, as it tries to convince us how nutritious and delicious bananas are. It even features animated sprites to represent the various vitamins and minerals in bananas. The "mineral" sprites are grossly obeseÃÂÃÂI'd like to see them get away with those today. Not bad for a silent film.
Ratings: Camp/Humor Value: ****. Weirdness: ***. Historical Interest: ****. Overall Rating: ****.

Interesting film about one heck of a bizarre subject. Film starts in an unnamed South American country, where those pesky virgin rain forests are chopped down for Banana farms. Soon the Bananas grow, and we are shown how they get to market. About 5 minutes left into the show, the film starts getting PROPOGANDISTIC with titles in CAPITALS coming TOWARDS us, to NAIL THE POINT DOWN. Rather offputting for such an innocous fruit!